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April 10, 2026
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"When used wisely, symphonic components can amplify the emotional intensity of metal to dangerous levels while also allowing the sophistication of the artists involved to shine."
"Metal fans love a gimmick. From Kiss and Gwar to Gloryhammer and Evil Scarecrow â if thereâs a costumed band pedalling an outrageous proposition, we jump all over it. The more ridiculous, the better. Thereâs a good chance this penchant for gimmickry is the cause of metalâs ever-increasing selection of bizarre subgenres, which carve out dedicated musical niches for pirate enthusiasts, gamers, and even Harry Potter fans. In fact, some of these subgenres are so niche, theyâre only occupied by one band."
"Metalcore will likely always be most associated with the Aughts, when heavy but melodic sing/scream specialists like Killswitch Engage, Atreyu, All That Remains, Underoath, Bullet for My Valentine and more ruled the mosh pits."
"You wanted it heavier, faster, more extreme, and of course, you had the speed and thrash metal scene, along comes the early black metal scene, then the death metal scene, and at that point, when I got into death metal, I was 14-15 years old, and I was just learning a few licks on the guitar, and I thought, 'I could do that. I could do 'You Suffer' by Napalm Death.' You didn't necessarily have to be on the right fret, you know, just make noise, that's how it started. I always wanted to be a really good lead guitar player, like Yngwie Malmsteen style, that's what I wanted, but I never practiced, never got there, and nobody else in the band at the time, when I started with my first band, Eruption, nobody wanted to be the singer. And I was, like, 'Well, I guess I'll be the singer.' And then because I couldn't really sing like Celine Dion, you know, I tried to do the screams instead."
"Industrial metal is a musical genre that draws from industrial music and heavy metal. It is usually centered around repeating metal guitar riffs, sampling, synthesizer or sequencer lines, and distorted vocals. The style became increasingly commercially successful in the 1990s. Subsequently, it is most well-known in various European permutations."
"[Dave Murray and Adrian Smith of Iron Maiden] are the OGâs of the twin axe attack (and thus to blame for inadvertently causing melodic death metal)."
"To someone unfamiliar with the history of heavy metal, the premise of a metal sub-genre dedicated exclusively to Norse themes would sound positively ludicrous. And yet! In the late â80s, Viking metal started gaining traction, thanks, in large part, to the works of Swedenâs Bathory, and, specifically, their seminal trilogy of albums: 1988âs Blood Fire Death, â90s Hammerheart, and â91âs Twilight of the Gods. Then, as the heavy metal Valkyries descended across all of Scandinavia in the early â90s â launching major âscenesâ around Norwayâs black metal, Swedenâs death metal, and Finlandâs folk metal â it was only a matter of time before these new bands began finding inspiration in their heritage. Marrying Norse history and legends, its bloodthirsty gods, and pagan rituals with heavy metalâs violent sounds, gothic tones, and natural aggression was almost too easy!"
"When discussing progressive metal, Dream Theater might be the quintessential band."
"You know, [whether to play with pick or with fingers] is a choice that bass players in this kind of music have to make. Sometimes it makes sense to try and go as fast as you can, even if it is a little jumbled, maybe in a tremolo picking part. If both guitar players arenât quite lining up anyway, then I think itâs okay to have things sound a little jumbled. It gives it a frantic sound, and that might be exactly what youâre going for."
"Iâm sure 99% of these bands have no idea that theyâre stealing riffs from Unbroken, Deadguy, At The Gates, and Carcass. Theyâre just copying Norma Jean, As I Lay Dying and Chiodos, who were copying Thursday, The Used and Aiden. Which is all fine, because all art references that which came before it -- the part that I miss is the DIY ethic that was such an integral part of the 90s metalcore/screamo scene. Also, less phony Christians."
"The kids in Alesana, August Burns Red, and possibly even As I Lay Dying have no fucking idea who those pioneering metalcore bands are, much less that screamy vocals were born in the tiny basement shows and vegan bakesales of the 90s DIY hardcore scene. [...] What is âthe missing linkâ? What is the mysterious subgenre connecting the skramz/hardcore scenes of my youth to the strange new world of modern screamo?? How did I get from watching Charles Bronson in a basement with 35 people in 1995 to seeing The Devil Wears Prada nearly crack the Billboard Top 10?! They sure as fuck have no idea who Charles Bronson or Bloodlet were, but if you do a little backtracking, the link is undeniable. [...] Like many other scholars, I believe the âmissing linkâ is the cohort of bands that includes Thursday, Hawthorne Heights, Taking Back Sunday, The Used, and Saves The Day. Much like Nirvana and Pearl Jam before them, the jerks in these bands knew a thing or two about legitimate hardcore/metalcore, but created music that became popular with mainstreamers/new jacks who were in turn inspired to create several generations of soulless, derivative bullshit that resembled real hardcore enough to be annoying, but not enough to actually be good. A second wave of even worse screamo/metalcore bands followed them up, including notorious shit-merchants like Chiodos, From First To Last, and Aiden. At least they werenât Christian. [...]"
"Like most genres, [metalcore is] not an easy term to define; even saying âmetal meets hardcoreâ doesnât really do it. Hardcore and metalâs relationship long predates metalcore; hardcore bands inspired metal bands to invent thrash, and in turn thrash bands inspired punk bands to start crossover thrash, both genres influenced grunge, and the cross-pollination just kept spiraling from there. I donât know the exact year that âmetalcoreâ entered the vernacular, but some of the earlier bands [...] probably would have just been called âmetallic hardcore.""
"The mainstream boom tarnished the word âmetalcoreâ for a while."
"In the mid-'90s, metal and punk started to grow closer than ever before, and metallic hardcore (later shortened to metalcore) was born. This wasn't the first time these worlds collided, of course, with bands like MotĂśrhead and Misfits bridging the gap between metal and punk in decades prior. However, by the end of the century it was the first time that this fusion was widespread enough to birth an entire genre, which still reigns supreme today as heavy music's most popular form. The genre started to take shape and become more popular by the early '00s, with bands like Killswitch Engage pulling it towards metal influences, while acts like Botch and Cave In kept the hardcore punk sound closer to the heart."
"An essential technique aspiring thrash metal guitarists must master is the ability to perform fast single-note riffs and power-chord figures using only downstrokes. Two classic examples immediately come to mind: Metallicaâs âMaster of Puppetsâ and Megadethâs âHanger 18,â and there are, of course, many more great examples of relentless downpicked fury to be found in the world of metal. [...] To me, a relentless downstroke-driven pick attack is the only way to get certain riffs to jump out of the guitar with the aggressiveness necessary to make them sound as heavy and menacing as possible."
"Despite what Atreyu may think, the roots of metalcore go back to the late â80s and it was a fully formed genre by the early-to-mid â90s, way before the mainstream metalcore boom of the early 2000s that put a lot of the genreâs overly-polished bands on MTV. Like a lot of underground genres of music that suddenly hit it big, metalcore had some growing pains, but recent years have seen the genreâs influence being reinterpreted by great newer bands who â going by their age â presumably found metalcore from the bands on MTV and then traced its roots back to the underground bands of the â90s."
"Exodus, arguably the most musically violent band in the Bay Area thrash movement, were also the most vocal in their hatred of fishnet-wearing glam-rockers, often calling for their fans to âKill the poseursâ, wherever they may be found. As such, SF thrash shows often devolved into mayhem."
"In the early â80s, San Franciscoâs Bay Area was the epicentre of the fastest, loudest, heaviest music in the world. Young, riff-hungry bands like Metallica, Exodus, Lääz Rockit, Possessed and Death Angel were pushing the genreâs boundaries, playing with more speed and dexterity than their metal contemporaries. They set the standard for American thrash."
"From the "scary music" idea Sabbath had in 1970, through to bands who took that idea and really ran with it, to funereal dirges and explorations of doom where it feels like you're on a different planet to Sabbath altogether, doom is a genre as wide as it is long. Often a truly underground thing full of lost relics and hidden gems, the influence of doom metal stretches far further than its small success stories suggest."
"Regardless of what it was called in its infancy, the sound produced by these early San Francisco bands was like nothing ever heard before. Young, fleet-fingered savages like Metallica, Death Angel, Exodus, Lääz Rockit, Possessed, Blind Illusion and a handful of others were pushing musical boundaries, playing faster and with more intricacy then seemed humanly possible."
"In high school, if you were playing any kind of music that wasn't dance, or just something that was really differentâyou know, rock, metal or hard rock, anything like thatâthen you needed to look like it. You needed to look like a bad dude, and we just looked like normal dudes....It wasn't about trying to impress everybody, because we looked at those types of people as weenies trying to do that stuff ... We just wore our normal stuff and we didn't really think about it. It just kind of happened that way and I think because we were searching for an extreme style, coupled with this no image, who-cares-what-we-look-like thing, then I think we fit in to that new movement that we discovered a little ways later, the whole Bay Area thrash scene."
"Given that heavy metal didnât completely take off until the 1970s â and the early part of the prior decade was dominated by pop, blues, R&B, surf music and rock ânâ roll â youâd be forgiven for thinking that the 1960s were lacking in significantly aggressive music. Youâd be wrong, of course, but youâd be forgiven. In fact, it was around this time that artists such as Link Wray, Willie Johnson, Sister Rosetta Tharpe and The Kinks started pioneering and popularizing guitar distortion, power chords and/or unconventional means of modifying amplifiers to get gruffer sounds. During the second half of the 1960s, even rock artists whoâre known for their lighter, brighter and poppier techniques ventured into some surprisingly hectic territories. As the songs discussed below demonstrate, many of the eraâs top-tier acts released tracks that couldâve rivaled the riotousness of the burgeoning metal forefathers."
"Although many bands from The British Invasion could have fallen under the banner of punk had they been born a few years later, the seeds were already being planted from something heavier on the horizon. Artists like The Stooges had already been exposing people to heavier flavours of rock, and looking at the more raucous songs by The Beatles and The Rolling Stones like âHelter Skelterâ, it wasnât like there was no room for something more aggressive on the charts."
"The common consensus is that Black Sabbath were the first heavy metal band. And maybe they were. But that doesnât mean they wrote the first heavy song. Because while Ozzy and co. certainly took the concept of intense, sinister music played by evil-looking dudes to new sonic and visual heights, there were plenty of unnerving sounds designed to scare the bejesus out of listeners being created well before Tony Iommiâs deathly Black Sabbath tritone riff signaled the end (or the beginning?) of the musical world as we know it."
"As the late 1960s bled into the early 1970s, the Age of Aquarius was under attack from cantankerous and extremely loud sonic forces. The bubbly psychedelia and sweet-tempered music that had fueled hippie hearts and minds were being assailed by steelier and more squalid rock, and many of those rough-necked, hairy harbingers of menace would inspire heavy metalâs ascendence. The debate about who was the first proto-metal artist is an endless circle of arguments and counter-arguments. You can reach back to the 1950s and find heavy metalâs origins in Willie Johnsonâs blues, and Link Wrayâs guitar rumbles. [...] Ultimately, you can throw everyone who was amplifying their sound and vision in the late 1960s and early 1970s into the gene pool that evolved into heavy metal."
"The line between doom and death metal can seem to some as simply a matter of tempo. But what needs remembering is the intent. As titles go, Rotting Misery from Paradise Lostâs Lost Paradise debut set out the distinction clearly. It also defined a new subgenre: doom-death."
"I was very fortunate to not get involved in any of [the church burnings] in that respect, but I think we were all very consumed with the whole thing. The attention it got. [...] All the negative attention and our local communityâs reaction to it, it became fuel to the fire. It exaggerated this feeling of âus and themâ. So I felt involved like that and in my band there were of course consequences. [...] And you canât really deny that it kind of validated the seriousness of what we were doing. I heard someone talking about young rap artists these days who start doing criminal activity to give credibility and validity to the things theyâre singing about. [...] Itâs a very strange teenage thing, some kind of rebellious wish to have power and be taken seriously. To be dangerous. Because when youâre a teenager youâre also so vulnerable. We donât have to psychoanalyse it all but as a grown-up I think itâs much easier to see how this happened."
"[The killing of Euronymous] is an old traditional fight, slandering and death threats start to fly between two people, and in the end one of them says, âYou know what, Iâm going to ... kill you' [...] Thatâs very traditional and mixed with power, money."
"I donât think [the church burnings] had a political agenda. I know that some of them are very extreme in their political agenda today, but they were young boys. I think they stopped thinking as individuals and started thinking more as a group, to impress each other, and to shock. They were in this bubble where, finally, you get immune: you take one step further, and then another, and before you know it, itâs not a big deal to kill a man."
"Today, we all find it kind of funny and sad at the same time. [...] Take Ivar from Enslaved: back then, we were writing stuff to each other that was so ugly, we had to look over our shoulders all the time. But today weâre the best of friends and weâre really embarrassed about all that stuff. A couple of years ago Kampfar won a Norwegian Grammy, and we were sitting there at the same table with Enslaved. Weâre the same guys that back then sent death threats to each other. And weâre sitting there now in suits, drinking wine, eating fancy dinners. It was like: âHow crazy is this?ââ Pretty crazy."
"The starkness and coldness of Norway itself is embedded in the bones of"
"Death metal exists in a void somewhere between high and low art. On one hand, the musicians playing this style are often world class, studying their instruments to an extreme level of virtuosity. Itâs not unusual for extreme metal musicians to have extensively studied classical music (see Gorguts, Fleshgod Apocalypse) or jazz (see Atheist, Cynic), nor is it odd to find acts with an interest in philosophy, history and mythology, or politics and social criticism. However, more often than not, those skills and interests are translated into songs that typically deal with tearing flesh and destroying Christians. Itâs music for people that appreciate artistic craft, but also like B-horror movies. Since it falls under the massive umbrella of âpopular music,â many would argue that death metal canât qualify as high art, but with its frequent use of advanced compositional techniques and experimental songwriting, it might be the closest thing the non-classical, non-jazz world has to high-culture music."
"Our purpose is to spread fear and evil."
"Thatâs why we started to wear our hair all black. We were singing about Satan and sadism, and everything that was wrong like torture and stuff like that â the opposite of hanging around at the beach [...] We were looking for perversity and craziness."
"The cops came to my parentsâ place late at night, just to go through my room. I was 17. They were trying to find something that connected me to something. They left empty-handed, but theyâd found some strange imagery on CDs and were nodding to each other like: âJackpot.â"
"These Norwegian kids were doing things that mainstream folk may have assumed metal musicians did all the time. To say the least, this was not a good look for rock music."
"Heavy metal slammed into the 1980s at full force, with clean lines and no hesitation. While hard-rock forebears like Aerosmith and Kiss struggled during the tail of the 1970s against disco headwinds and the mockery of three-chord punk, fledgling heavy-metal bands cut their teeth in the shadows and prepared for a big takeover. Then, boom: 1980 exploded with debuts from Iron Maiden, Def Leppard, Diamond Head and Angel Witch â pillars of the so-called New Wave of British Heavy Metal, or NWOBHM â as well as career-high shock treatments by elders Judas Priest, Saxon and MotĂśrhead."
"Thrash and grind shared a common love of speed and aggression, and a number of bands fell comfortably into the middle ground between the two genres. Bands such as Autopsy (band), Entombed and combined grindcore's extreme pace and growled vocals with more complex song structures. This amalgamation of styles gave birth to death metal."
"The metal comes just from a resentment of crap being called metal. That's what drove the metal to be as heavy as it was and the lyrical content just had to step up to the music. It had to fit that angry disposition. There's no shortage of things to be pissed at in the world and people can pick their poison."
"This kind of music helps people get through negative things. I mean, you're taking something negative and turning it into something positive by making it into music -- instead of actually going out and doing something violent. There's plenty of ways to turn things around, and that is what death metal did for me. [...] It got me through alot of negative things in my life -- it was always there for me."
"[Black metal is] a harsh, dark form of heavy metal with a focus on extremity and a satanic bent â although if you asked five fans youâd get seven different answers."
"Bands such as Metallica, Slayer and Sodom, inspired by the new wave of British heavy metal, added aggressive staccato guitar riffs and a pronounced punk influence to forge thrash metal."
""Thrash" wasnât used that much as a term in 1982. I think it was more in 1984, with speedsters like Exodus, Slayer, Possessed, and Suicidal Tendencies, that we called them thrash and not just metal or punk."
"[Black metal] was atmospheric, with a deeper approach than what the death metal scene was doing. You could travel within it."
"Christianity never suited Norway. It never belonged here. The black metal scene reacted to that. We needed to have something to be opposite to."
"[Euronymous] had the belief, the more extreme the better, the more unbelievable the better. [...] Then you have someone like Vikernes who comes in and starts taking it at face value, saying, âWe canât just talk about this stuff. Weâve got to do it.â It was the combination of the two of them meeting that pushed things over the edge."
"They wonât hire somebody unless theyâre into metal. They take pride in what they do and genuinely love metal."
"[Punk rock and heavy metal] were pretty segregated [before 1982]. Iâm sure there were people from both those scenes that went to different shows but we didnât book any shows with, like, Black Flag or TSOL. We never booked shows with those guys, which I regret, because I think it would have opened peopleâs eyes. Thatâs where the thrash thing came from, it crossed over from the punk element. Consider the circle mosh and stage diving and stuff like that â that came directly from the punk scene."
"[Black metal] sounds like evil, ranting demons laying waste to a snowy Scandinavian forest."
"What makes death metal so powerful to many fans is its versatility. It can blend itself well into any other genre of metal seamlessly; it has had a part in the formation and inspiration of many black metal grindcore, doom metal and experimental bands across the globe."
Heute, am 12. Tag schlagen wir unser Lager in einem sehr merkwĂźrdig geformten HĂśhleneingang auf. Wir sind von den Strapazen der letzten Tage sehr erschĂśpft, das Abenteuer an dem groĂen Wasserfall steckt uns noch allen in den Knochen. Wir bereiten uns daher nur ein kurzes Abendmahl und ziehen uns in unsere Kalebassen-Zelte zurĂźck. Dr. Zwitlako kann es allerdings nicht lassen, noch einige Vermessungen vorzunehmen. 2. Aug.
- Das Tagebuch
Es gab sie, mein Lieber, es gab sie! Dieses Tagebuch beweist es. Es berichtet von rätselhaften Entdeckungen, die unsere Ahnen vor langer, langer Zeit während einer Expedition gemacht haben. Leider fehlt der grĂśĂte Teil des Buches, uns sind nur 5 Seiten geblieben.
Also gibt es sie doch, die sagenumwobenen Riesen?
Weil ich so nen Rosenkohl nicht dulde!
- Zwei auĂer Rand und Band
Und ich bin sauer!